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On Earth Day, Solid Waste Companies Pledge Support for Zero Waste

New Technology Will Help Reach Goal

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 22, 2010
Contact: Thom Metzger, 202-506-0511 or tmetzger@envasns.org

(Washington, DC) – The nation's solid waste companies said today that they fully support state and local initiatives to reach "zero waste," and will continue to invest in technology to reach that goal.

"Americans have already witnessed a transformation in how we deal with our trash," said Bruce J. Parker, president and CEO of the National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSMWA), which represents the for-profit solid waste sector in the United States. "We still generate a significant amount of municipal solid waste – EPA estimates almost 250 million tons in the last year alone. But we are sending more than 7 million fewer tons to disposal than we did 20 years ago."

Parker attributed the decrease to the growth of municipal recycling and composting programs and the increasing use of waste-based energy projects, largely made possible through innovative technologies developed by solid waste companies.

"Solid waste companies are an important partner in zero waste efforts," Parker said.  "Zero waste doesn't mean 'no trash,' but rather, continuing to find economically achievable ways to treat as much waste as possible as a resource. It means diverting more of the waste stream away from disposal to be recycled or turned into a clean, renewable source of energy.  Trash haulers and other solid waste processors will still be needed to make it work."

In a newly released position paper (http://www.environmentalistseveryday.org/zerowaste), the NSWMA acknowledges that "America is transitioning slowly but surely to a zero waste society," and says the industry is "stepping forward to facilitate a discussion among the public, waste collection service providers, customers, manufacturers, government and consumers on how we can collectively work toward zero waste."

"It is important to recognize that the transition to zero waste will not be easy or quick," said Parker.  "It took almost twenty years to double the recycling rate, from 16.2 percent of municipal solid waste in 1990, to 33.2 percent in 2008.  To boost these numbers even further, we will need to continue to expand recycling programs, invest in properly built and permitted processing facilities and cut down on packaging and other waste at the source." 

For an interview with Bruce Parker about zero waste or other solid waste issues, contact Thom Metzger at (202) 506-0511 or tmetzger@envasns.org.

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EIA is the trade association that represents the private sector solid waste and recycling industry through its two sub-associations, the National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA) and the Waste Equipment Technology Association (WASTEC). NSWMA represents for-profit companies in North America that provide solid, hazardous and medical waste collection, recycling and waste disposal services, and companies that provide professional and consulting services to the waste services industry. WASTEC represents companies that design, build, distribute, service and consult with respect to the equipment and technology systems that are used to collect, contain, transport, store, process, recycle, treat and dispose of the world's solid wastes and recyclable materials.